Food containers commonly have a base with a food-holding cavity and a lid, with each constructed of a thin deformed plastic sheet, or plastic sheeting. The closed container can be easily carried by forming the rim portion of the base with elongated outer sections that each extends almost halfway around the rim. The outer sections extend between pivot joints that lie at opposite sides of the rim, and the outer sections can be pivoted up to form a handle assembly. U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,257,401 and 6,349,847 show such handles formed in the base of a plastic sheet container. One problem encountered with such handles is that after they have been used once, the long outer sections that form the handles constitute parts that repeatedly move, or “wave” up and down. If a person wishes to eat from the base, the waving handles can be disturbing. A food container with handles, which avoided a base with waving or dangling handles, would be of value.
It is often desirable to stack two or more closed containers on one another. If a higher container of the stack is accidentally lifted slightly and shifted to one side so it is not centered on the lowest container, the stack may collapse. It would be desirable to stack closed containers so they cannot be accidentally removed from the stack.
In accordance with one embodiment of the invention, a food container is provided with a handle assembly that does not interfere with eating out of the base, and wherein a plurality of identical food containers can be latchably stacked so containers in the stack cannot be individually lifted and shifted by accident. The handles are formed in the lid rather than the base, so long sections of the outer rim that form the handles are not present on the base and do not disturb a person eating out of the base. Latchable stacking is provided by forming one of the elements of the base and lid elements with a plurality of vertically undercut grooves, and forming the other element with a plurality of horizontal projections. The projections can enter and slide along one of the grooves by turning or linearly sliding one element relative to the other, or even by forcefully pushing down the lid onto the base.
In a stack of two containers, the top wall of the lid element of the lower container has a large upward protuberance with opposite vertical end walls that are curved about the vertical axis of the container. The base element of the higher container has a bottom wall with a large upward receptacle having opposite vertical end walls that are also curved about the vertical axis, so the lid protuberance can fit in and turn in the upward receptacle. Horizontal projections of the base element fit into vertically undercut grooves in the protuberance to latch the containers together. The protuberance also has vertical passages through which the projections move down to reach the grooves, and through which the receptacles move out of the grooves to separate the containers. The containers can be latchably stacked by merely forcibly pushing down the upper container against the lower one, so the projections are forced down into the grooves.
Instead of using a protuberance that is circularly curved about the container axis, the lid element can be formed with horizontally-extending, linearly elongated grooves, and the base element can be formed with projections that enter and slide along the grooves by moving the lid element along one of the linear directions.
The novel features of the invention are set forth with particularity in the appended claims. The invention will be best understood from the following description when read in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
In the prior art, handles somewhat similar to what is shown at 80 and 82 in
As discussed above, a pair of identical containers of the type shown in
One way to assemble a pair of containers into a stack is to align them and then move down the base 14 (
The above described method to connect a pair of containers, by aligning projections with vertical passages to move down the projections and then turn one of the containers, can be avoided for faster latchable stacking. Such faster stacking can be accomplished by positioning the receptacle 44 of one container so its projections 52 lie directly over the grooves 50 of the other container. It is usually desirable to first align the containers so their center planes 66, 67 are coincident and their opposite sides 24, 32 lie one over the other, and then forcefully push down the upper container. As shown in
Although applicant shows the upward protrusion 40 of the cover and the upward receptacle 44 of the base as both having end walls 42, 46 curved about the vertical axis 12 of the container, it is only necessary that one of them be curved, and that the other one fit closely in the curved part.
The base and cover of the same container are latched together by inward (projecting partially towards the axis 12,
The pads 150 on the top of the cover walls form guiding walls 164, while the base forms guided walls 166 that move along the guiding walls that guide the horizontal projections into the vertically undercut grooves.
When the base 172 is an element of an upper container of a stack, and the cover 174 is an element 174 of the lower container of the stack, projections 190 of the base element can slide down along vertical passages 192 of the cover, and one of the elements can be turned to slide the projections into vertically undercut grooves 194 of the cover. The base of an upper container can be quickly connected to the cover of a next lower container by forcefully pushing down the upper container, in the same manner described above. As shown in
Thus, the invention provides containers that can be latchably stacked, and provides containers that have handles that allow a single container or stack of containers to be easily carried without subsequent annoyance when a person eats out of the container base. A container with handle assembly has long thin handle sections formed in the cover of the container rather than in the base, and uses a robust attachment of the cover to the base. Containers that can be latchably stacked have base and cover elements, with one element having vertically undercut groove walls and the other having horizontal projections that are slide able into the grooves. The element with grooves preferably has vertical passages with the bottom (or possibly the top) of each passage leading to one end of a vertically undercut groove, so a projection can move vertically along a passage and then horizontally along a groove. Some containers can be rapidly latched together by forcefully pushing down one container onto another one so the projections move along a beveled surface directly into a groove. One element of an upper container forms a large downwardly-opening receptacle, and an element of the lower container forms an upward protrusion that fits into the receptacle, with walls the elements being circularly curved about a vertical axis of the containers. Another container has linear grooves that receive projections by sliding one container linearly on the other.
Although particular embodiments of the invention have been described and illustrated herein, it is recognized that modifications and variations may readily occur to those skilled in the art, and consequently, it is intended that the claims be interpreted to cover such modifications and equivalents.
This is a Continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/154,369 filed May 22, 2008 now U.S. Pat. No. 7,661,528 which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/998,582 filed Nov. 30, 2007.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 12154369 | May 2008 | US |
Child | 12658032 | US | |
Parent | 11998582 | Nov 2007 | US |
Child | 12154369 | US |